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3,5000 year-old remains of man unearthed in Vietnam

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Press Trust of India Kuala Lumpur

The man is said to have lived in the period of Phung Nguyen culture about 3,500 years ago, the 'Vietnam Plus' website quoting the state-run VNA news agency reported.

The remains will be sent to the Vinh Phuc province's museum for more research and preservation.

Deputy General Secretary of the Vietnam Association of Archaeology (VAA), Nguyen Lan Cuong said the remains were unearthed during an excavation jointly conducted since last December by the VAA, the History Faculty of the University of Social Sciences and Humanity and the Vinh Phuc provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

Many other artifacts such as stone axes and graters, bronze arrows, ceramics and jewellery made of stone, animal horns and bones have also been found during this evacuation. Scientists dated them back to the Dong Dau, Go Mun and Phung Nguyen cultures.

 

The Dong Dau relic site is one of the largest excavation sites in the country, where numerous artifacts of the four cultures during the time of Hung Kings, have been found.

Based on their findings, archaeologists thought the eastern area of the Dong Dau relic site was the living place of ancient Vietnamese people in the Phung Nguyen period while most of the tombs were found in the southwestern area.

  

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First Published: Sep 03 2010 | 8:48 PM IST

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